Open Thread - Wed. July 6, 2016 - Effects of the Neo-liberal Push for Deregulation

Good Morning 99%'ers. Today's Open Thread topic in another in the series on neo-liberalism. For those who may be interested in previous essays on this subject, here are the links to those essays.

Week 1 - The Curse of Neo-liberalism
Week 2 - Neo-liberalism Part 2
Week 3 - The Neo-liberal Myth of Meritocracy
Week 4 - Characteristics of Neo-liberalism
Week 5 - Neo-liberalism - Obama and the Clintons
Week 6 - Neo-liberalism - The Legacy of Bill Clinton
Week 7 - Neo-liberalism - Lack of Empathy
Week 8 - Overview of the Impacts of Privatization
Week 9 - The Rule of the Market

In one of my first essays in this series on neo-liberalism, I referenced an excellent article titled What is Neoliberalism? This article was written by Elizabeth Martinez and Arnoldo Garcia and published by Corp Watch. This article provided an excellent definition of neo-liberalism as well as a listing of the five characteristics of neo-liberalism. Among the five characteristics of neo-liberalism is the the push for deregulation.

DEREGULATION. Reduce government regulation of everything that could diminsh profits, including protecting the environment and safety on the job.

Businesses often complain that government regulations interfere with innovation and prevent competition which can be a good thing for the consumer. So businesses and total industries are consistently lobbying elected officials at all levels to remove as many regulations as possible so that the market will dictate how businesses operate. The problem here is that the purpose of a business is contradictory to that of regulations. The purpose of a business is to return the highest profit margin possible to its shareholders. The purpose of regulations is to protect the public from monopolies, unethical business practices, and to ensure the health and safety of the public. The market cannot be relied upon to do this, so it is up to the government to regulate businesses.

In a recent article posted on About Money, author Kimberly Amadeo lists the pros and cons of deregulation. While I found her listing of pros rather thin and unsupported with documentation, her listing of the cons of deregulation was very good.

  1. Allows asset bubbles to build and burst, creating crises and recessions.
  2. Prevents industries with huge initial infrastructure costs, like electricity and cable, to get started.
  3. Exposes people to fraud and excessive risk-taking by companies that will do anything to gain higher profit.
  4. Social concerns are lost. For example, businesses will ignore damage to the environment since the costs aren't absorbed by the company.
  5. Rural and other unprofitable populations are underserved.

I think we all can name multiple examples of deregulation that have ended up costing the people of this country in so many ways. Often such efforts at deregulating an industry are marketed as promoting competition which should result in lower costs to the consumers. And sometimes that is the case in the beginning until an industry consolidates with the stronger companies buying out the weaker ones and then with just a few large companies controlling the market, the consumer loses out.

Here are just three examples of deregulation that has resulted in how an entire industry has changed the way it did business and how it has affected the consumer or citizen.

Airline Deregulation Act of 1978 - Prior to 1978, airline routes were highly regulated as well as the schedules, air fares, and quality of service. Immediately after deregulation, air fares were cut with numerous airlines competing for service. But that was short lived as airlines merged and the industry developed into a hubs and spoke system in which one airline effectively controls a hub.

In retrospect, 2007 may have marked the year effective competition ended and merged airlines began exercising monopoly powers. Since then airlines have slashed the number of flights. Available seat capacity is the lowest in a decade even while passenger volume has increased, which should come as no surprise to those searching for elbow room. Fares are rising rapidly.

In addition, airlines have instituted add on fees for nearly everything. It is all about maximizing profits and the add on fees are an easy way to extract even more profits from the passengers.

Probably the clearest manifestation of unregulated monopoly power the rapid rise in non-ticket revenue. In 2008 American Airlines became the first to charge for the first checked bag. Others quickly followed. Five years later, airlines charge for virtually everything. In April, four of the largest raised the fee for changing a domestic flight to $200 from $150. At the beginning of the year, Southwest introduced a $40 upgrade that allows passengers to board early. Actual ticket sales now account for just 70 percent of total revenue at major airlines, down from 84 percent in 2000.

Telecommunications Act of 1996 - It has been twenty years since Bill Clinton signed the Telecommunications Act of 1996 and probably no other legislation has had such a profound effect upon the way the American people get information and ultimately our democracy.

The act dramatically reduced important Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulations on cross ownership, and allowed giant corporations to buy up thousands of media outlets across the country, increasing their monopoly on the flow of information in the United States and around the world.

This scathing article by Michael Corcoran of Truthout details the devastating effects of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 upon our democracy. Before its enactment, the FCC was able to regulate the the number of outlets under one ownership in an area and cross ownerships.

The negative impact of the law cannot be overstated. The law, which was the first major reform of telecommunications policy since 1934, according to media scholar Robert McChesney, "is widely considered to be one of the three or four most important federal laws of this generation." The act dramatically reduced important Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulations on cross ownership, and allowed giant corporations to buy up thousands of media outlets across the country, increasing their monopoly on the flow of information in the United States and around the world.

"Never have so many been held incommunicado by so few," said Eduardo Galeano, the Latin American journalist, in response to the act.

Twenty years later the devastating impact of the legislation is undeniable: About 90 percent of the country's major media companies are owned by six corporations.

Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999 - First, we must look back at the history behind bank regulation. Perhaps one of the most important things that came out of the Great Depression was Glass-Steagal which created a wall between savings and loan banks from investment banks.

In 1933, President Franklin Roosevelt signed the Glass-Steagall Act. By then, the country was mired in the depths of the Great Depression, and nearly 5,000 banks had failed. Businesses and people lost money. People lost jobs. The country was in crisis. Glass-Steagall was designed to prevent another crash in the future. Among other things, it barred commercial banks from getting into the investment business. It raised barriers between commercial banks, securities firms and insurance companies.

Nearly 70 years later, the Depression was history, and there was a push for deregulation to repeal or roll back Glass-Steagall. The result was the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999, which took down that wall between the banks that made routine loans and the ones that did risky investments.

We all know what happened as a result of deregulation of the banks. And while the big banks are doing better than ever as a result of the bank bailouts and the big banks are also bigger than ever as a result of government intervention, the people of this country are still struggling. This whole debacle is worth more than one essay of its own.

The bottom line is that most deregulation usually ends up being a negative for the people in the long run. Now we are faced with the biggest deregulation of them all, the Trans Pacific Partnership. The TPP is less about trade and far more about deregulation to protect corporate profits.

I hope to address the above issue in greater detail in a future essay.

On a personal note. After yesterday's FBI pronouncement that Hillary Clinton will not be indicted, I have been in a funk about whether or not any series such as this one is even relevant any more. Educating us about the coup after it has already happened seems counter productive and most people here are very aware of it. I honestly do not know where we go from here.

On a second personal note. This is the time of year for the Tour de France which is an obsession of mine so I will be monitoring this OT sporadically in the morning. I do hope to catch up and respond to all comments later in the day.

But for now, this is an Open Thread and so feel free to post whatever you wish.

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riverlover's picture

Yes, all depressed and more cynical than ever. For instance, how many Tour de France cyclists are NOT doping with something? Going to be another hot one today, back to targeted plant watering, but maybe significant rainfall tomorrow and Friday. Not enough to solve the drought conditions here. Plus, with all the bad news, I also have SAD already rearing its head, already over a minute less sunlight.

With a son in the airline industry, the latest merger (AA+USAir) may be a boon for him. USAir culture brought in Unions. He is in grunt-level management, but is union-qualified by title. That could mean a significant raise (>10%). He is pro-union. Wink

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gulfgal98's picture

I do believe that doping in cycling today is minimal. Most of the younger riders came into the sport post Armstrong era and from what I have read, they are very opposed to the use of drugs. The other thing is that sponsorships are very difficult to come by and after the Lance Armstrong era of doping scandals, many top sponsors left the sport. So it is to a team's benefit to internally police the riders. The controls on the riders by the sport itself are better and more sophisticated today and most riders participate in events (where they are tested) nearly every week during the season. Lance only rode the Tour and did not participate in other events. The sport maintains what is called a biological passport on every rider, so if there are anomalies, it will show up.

I am happy for your son to be with a company that has a union. We need more workers unionized in this country.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

people like her never get held to account while whistle blowers get the book thrown at them,get their passports revoked.I think I start making signs "This way to the barricades".
I do believe we have to let the whole system go to shits so we can rebuilt it.

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" El pueblo unido jamás será vencido. The people united will never be defeated "

riverlover's picture

USA seems to be good at that elsewhere. Of course, that's military and not civilians.

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gulfgal98's picture

I do believe we are in the final stages of the empire. The question is will the empire fall before climate change wipes out much of humanity.

There has been much made of how Jeffrey Sterling got the book thrown at him and is now in prison for the "suspicion" that he mishandled secret documents. Yet Hillary Clinton clearly did and also did everything she could to avoid FOIA, including the destruction of public records.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

may not be good for America but it's damn good for CBS and he hopes it continues.

The for-profit press (FPP)has given up the charade of responsible journalism and gone beyond the yellow journalism of Wm Randolph Hearst. Watching, or reading, the FPP should be undertaken only to gather information on the degradation of "news" in this sector. It's toxic, as are most of the monopolistic entities that make the world less livable.

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

gulfgal98's picture

by large corporations has led to the state we are in now. Journalism is dead and has been replaced by infotainment.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

former legions of "hard-hitting" journalists have made their peace with the for-profit media and happily cash the RW paychecks and leave unreported the human tragedies unfolding daily do to neo-liberalism and its stranglehold on Americans and most of the world.

Journalism, if it be that, is happy with a range of debate that stretches all the way from GM to GE.

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

riverlover's picture

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Commerce Commission, airlines were required to serve regional airports and charge affordable fares. It was part of keeping America together and eliminating as many "have-nots" as possible. the system was in line with FDR's rural electrification and mandating telephone service serve all Americans and those most distant from town pay the same monthly fee as those living in town.
Things like this have been swept away by deregulation so that corporations can profit at the expense of many Americans.

Speaking of fees: Banks now make a majority of their profits from fees not from loaning money to companies and individuals.

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

kharma's picture

Thanks for this well written essay in your series. I think it still important to document, even if we are feeling overwhelmed. The thing is, the other way (neo) is not sustainable and will eventually fail, so either way, our time will come.

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There is nothing which I dread so much as a division of the republic into two great parties.. This...is to be dreaded as the greatest political evil under our Constitution.--John Adams

gulfgal98's picture

that we all live long enough to see the revolution. It is going to be very difficult when our own government is against the people.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

mimi's picture

I like your series.
I also like Juan Cole's take on equality of certain animals.
Hillary Clinton and Ed Snowden: Some Animals Are More Equal Than Others - Posted on Jul 6, 2016 - By Juan Cole

But anyway the real source of her annoyance with Snowden is that she believes in Big Government surveillance of the general population, no matter how unconstitutional it is. (So does Comey). Hillary Clinton voted for the USA Patriot Act, which gutted the fourth amendment right to protection from unreasonable, warrantless search and seizure of papers and personal effects. She also voted to renew it in 2005 and 2006. It was practices that the FBI and NSA alleged were authorized by these laws that Clinton helped pass that constituted the abuses on which Ed Snowden felt compelled to blow the whistle.

Clinton has also wrongly and irresponsibly said that Ed Snowden could have gone through internal channels to blow the whistle on NSA abuses, and would thereby have gained legal protections.

First of all, no such legal protections exist with regard to his particular circumstances. A whole string of other intelligence whistleblowers has gone to jail, which is what would have happened to Snowden. That is not to mention the evidence for dirty tricks played on whistleblowers by government agencies, including the destruction of exculpatory evidence.

Second of all, the NSA has now been forced to admit that Snowden did in fact repeatedly try official channels and was stonewalled.

Clinton should apologize for her earlier allegations about Snowden and acknowledge her mistake in suggesting that he could have blown the whistle through official channels and been legally protected. She could just ask Thomas Drake if any of that were true. she put persons of conscience like Snowden in a position where they had to risk their lives to let Americans know that the National Security State had repealed the Constitution

Somehow I have a hard time to imagine that she would ever have the decency to apologize and admit her being extremely careless with the constitutionality of her legal interpretation of what the National Security
State is allowed to do.

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gulfgal98's picture

by Juan Cole. I hope everyone here will take the time to read it. Thank you for sharing it with us, mimi.

And no, I have zero plans for this series to go beyond this site.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

mimi's picture

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OLinda's picture

Standing at the President's podium with Presidential Seal for her rally speech. I imagine they're both thinking "Sure it's wrong. What are you going to do about it? hahahaha."

PS. Good morning, gulfgal and everybody!

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riverlover's picture

Yes, he thinks that he can pull that off as thoughtful. I see a beaten President, even if he deserves much beating.

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shaharazade's picture

was nothing but Clintonite's, left over bushies and disciples of Rubin, Big Dog's Sec. of Treasury. The policy and agenda of this administration was just a continuation of the 'legacy' of the complicit by partisan coup. Looking back my tin foil hat keeps telling me that the Obama vs. Clinton primary was a total put up job. They knew after the Bush regime people wanted this shit stopped and were not about to elect another Clinton so they offered Obama with his pocket full of empty hope as a reform alternative sop to the growing public discontent with both party's.

Difi said at Obama's inauguration that this was peaceful changing of the guard. She lied and so did Obama. The same people including the Clinton machine own and run the Democratic party. Both parties for that matter this is a by-partisan coup. Obama was the talented salesmen and PR guy they put out front to placate the majority who were sick and tired of the RW Bush abuses of power. The Democrat's we elected in 2006-2008 sucked at being the loyal opposition and they sucked worse once they became the majority.

This really is a duopoly where both sides R and D's are complicit and have advanced anti democratic 'inevitable' rule by the global 1%. Endless bloody war, austerity and destruction of the planet. The beat goes on. All of the their legacy's are the story of the demise of democracy and our hard won universal human right's. I think Obama did what he was hired to do destroy hope and normalize, legalize the Bushi/Cheney's illegal abuses of power and the destruction of the rule of law.

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gulfgal98's picture

What amazes me is that Obama has to know that Clinton is no good for his legacy and yet he done everything he can to pave the way for her. I want to throw up.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Lily O Lady's picture

quid pro quo for helping with the Obama campaign. This may be Obama returning the favor. Just some friendly party unity.

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"The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power. Now do you begin to understand me?" ~Orwell, "1984"

martianexpatriate's picture

I need to dig up my audio and re-record some things. Not getting as much done as I would like the last few days. The assisted living facility I live is not an easy place to stay up in. Someone was taken out in an ambulance a couple days ago. I'm not sure if he will be back.

My project moves forward. Have to get it going.

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gulfgal98's picture

Sadly, there is a lot of turnover at assisted living places. I hope your project will get back on schedule soon!

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

take in the decades to come for his toadying to the 1% at the expense of the majority. Maybe he's thinking about how the $Millions that he'll rake in will salve his ego. And, maybe, he'll realize that in the neoliberal bubble he'll inhabit, no one will be rude enough to point out that he was a stinker of a president because in that bubble, he's been a valuable asset. Maybe.

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"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"

gulfgal98's picture

of a conscience, he has to realize just how badly he misled and even harmed the most vulnerable people in this country, most of who are AA's and who supported him without question.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Lookout's picture

Hey gg,

Caught a good interview with Epstein y'all might enjoy
Published on Jul 4, 2016 PERI’s Gerald Epstein explains why financial institutions like the IMF promote fiscal policy that reduces investment, economic growth, and employment.
10 min
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2aAJlzyTo4]

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

OLinda's picture

Per CNN

President Barack Obama scheduled to speak about Afghanistan at 10:25 a.m. ET.

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And I second that motion for a book!

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gulfgal98's picture

but no thank you on anything more than what you read here. Not my cup of tea.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

shaharazade's picture

make global entities like Goldman Sachs rule the world. This is the neoliberal/neocon intent and purpose. Democracy and the people's common good is nothing but an impediment to their want to rule the world wet dreams. The Clinton administration worked hard to privatize, deregulate and globalize. It's a bi-partisan coup that's been in the works for a long time.

This is nothing new the oligarchy has been at this Great Game forever. Economically and militarily the people of the world, not just in the US, have no representation as there are no checks or balances left to rein the multinational's in. It's up to people globally to stop them and rein them in as it always has been throughout history. The pig ignorant Tea Bagger's have it upside down but British Empire's faltering East India Company's monopoly and taxation sparked the American revolution. Austerity by the too big's, is now imposed globally to keep the 1% giant vampire squid obscenely profitable.

Governments everywhere are owned and controlled by the 1% who believe that they are chosen and destined to rule the world. Big Dog told us all that this inevitable way forward was going to create a tide that raised all boats. He lied but he did the job as far as removing barriers of democracy and the laws and principals people have developed to keep these wolves from the door. Disaster capitalism where endless war is the enforcer for the psycho's who 'rule the world'.

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gulfgal98's picture

Governments everywhere are owned and controlled by the 1% who believe that they are chosen and destined to rule the world.

This is the myth of meritocracy. What is interesting to me is that those who believe they are the chosen ones must also have absolutely zero sense of responsibility and empathy to their fellow human beings. They are amoral shells of humanity themselves.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

shaharazade's picture

article at Truthout about neoliberalsim and Brexit/Trump. It starts with Thatcher and ends with Cameron but it's really about the neoliberalism as a 'inevitable' world system that has no alternative. Very interesting in combination with this essay regarding deregulation. A worthy understandable read that looks behind our current politics and focuses on the neoliberal global capitalist market.

We Don't Need Trump or Brexit to Reject the Credo of Neoliberal Market Inevitability
http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/36696-we-don-t-need-trump-or-brexi...

In the wake of the June 23 Brexit vote, global media have bristled with headlines declaring the Leave victory to be the latest sign of a historic rejection of "globalization" by working-class voters on both sides of the Atlantic. While there is an element of truth in this analysis, it misses the deeper historical currents coursing beneath the dramatic headlines. If our politics seem disordered at the moment, the blame lies not with globalization alone but with the "There Is No Alternative" (TINA) philosophy of neoliberal market inevitability that has driven it for nearly four decades.

British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher introduced the TINA acronym to the world in a 1980 policy speech that proclaimed "There Is No Alternative" to a global neoliberal capitalist order. Thatcher's vision for this new order was predicated on the market-as-god economic philosophy she had distilled from the work of Austrian School economists such as Friedrich Hayek and her own fundamentalist Christian worldview. Western political life today has devolved into a series of increasingly desperate and inchoate reactions against a sense of fatal historical entrapment originally encoded in Thatcher's TINA credo of capitalist inevitability. If this historical undercurrent is ignored, populist revolt will not produce much-needed democratic reform. It will instead be exploited by fascistic nationalist demagogues and turned into a dangerous search for political scapegoats.

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mimi's picture

if I just would understand what those people are talking about and what they are doing. All I assume to understand is that it might be a good idea to get back your own country's currency and leave the EU behind? Either you can't get access to the money in your annuities retirement accounts, or the money is worth half of what it was a year ago, or the money loses worth, because the exchange rates to the dollar are in the baseoment, or the banks won't pay out cash savings in savings accounts and you sit on your real estate and can't sell it. I mean Fuck the Shit. Or if you can explain the following article for dummies, go ahead. May be I should read the author's twelve books? What's a bail-in ? I want a "Waehrungsreform" (currency reform) and a fixed exchange rate dollar to gold. And I want the supposed gold reserves which sit somewhere in the US to be returned to the countries who own them.
I mean how about some real basic stuff, things you would expect your kids to do with their allowance money. Save it, count it, spend it and put it in a safe place.

Brexit and the Derivatives Time Bomb

The ZeroHedge editorial questions whether Brexit was actually the cause of the Italian collapse. The banks were already in serious trouble. A good crisis was just needed so that EU rules could be suspended without admitting they were unworkable all along; and Brexit fit the bill. But the real trigger of the collapse seems to have been the bail-in scheme implemented in January 2016. According to ZeroHedge:

The new bail-in reform this year has brought matters to a head, catching EU authorities off guard. It was intended to protect taxpayers by ensuring that creditors suffered major losses first if the bank gets into trouble, but was badly designed and has led to a flight from bank shares. The Bank of Italy has called for a complete overhaul of the bail-in rules.

. . . The banking squeeze has become politically explosive in Italy after thousands of small depositors were wiped out at four regional banks late last year. They were classified as junior bondholders even though most of them were just ordinary savers who did not realize what was being done with their money.

The bail-in scheme was supposed to shift losses from governments to bank creditors and depositors, but it has served instead to scare off depositors and investors, making shaky banks even shakier. On top of that, heightened capital requirements have made it practically impossible for Italian banks to raise capital. According to Lorenzo Cordogno, former director general of the Italian Treasury, the result has been that the ECB is “unwittingly destabilizing the banks in an overzealous attempt to make Europe’s banks safer.”

But EU rules have been flexible in “emergencies.” Before the Eurozone debt crisis of 2011-12, the European Central Bank was forbidden to buy sovereign debt. Then Greece and other southern European countries got into serious trouble, sending bond yields (interest rates) through the roof. But default or debt restructuring was not considered an option. The ECB finally got on the quantitative easing bandwagon and is now buying government debt along with other financial assets at the rate of €80 billion per month.

According to Evans-Pritchard, Brexit has not yet caused serious trouble in the debt markets, because this new QE policy has allowed the ECB to cap bond yields. Rather than deal with a very awkward Italeave, the EU could cave on its bail-in and bailout rules as well.

May be instead of bail-out or bail-in one should bail on the whole shit and trade in a new currency.

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Key findings

The UK chose to join the invasion of Iraq before all peaceful options for disarmament had been exhausted. Military action at that time was not a last resort
Military action might have been necessary later, but in March 2003, it said, there was no imminent threat from the then Iraq leader Saddam Hussein, the strategy of containment could have been adapted and continued for some time and the majority of the Security Council supported continuing UN inspections and monitoring
On 28 July 2002, the then Prime Minister Tony Blair assured US President George W Bush he would be with him "whatever". But in the letter, he pointed out that a US coalition for military action would need: Progress on the Middle East peace process, UN authority and a shift in public opinion in the UK, Europe, and among Arab leaders

Judgements about the severity of the threat posed by Iraq's weapons of mass destruction - or WMD - were presented with a certainty that was not justified
Intelligence had "not established beyond doubt" that Saddam Hussein had continued to produce chemical and biological weapons
The Joint Intelligence Committee said Iraq has "continued to produce chemical and biological agents" and there had been "recent production". It said Iraq had the means to deliver chemical and biological weapons. But it did not say that Iraq had continued to produce weapons
Policy on the Iraq invasion was made on the basis of flawed intelligence assessments. It was not challenged, and should have been

The circumstances in which it was decided that there was a legal basis for UK military action were "far from satisfactory"
The invasion began on 20 March 2003 but not until 13 March did then Attorney General Lord Goldsmith advise there was, on balance, a secure legal basis for military action. Apart from No 10's response to his letter on 14 March, no formal record was made of that decision and the precise grounds on which it was made remain unclear
The UK's actions undermined the authority of the United Nations Security Council: The UN's Charter puts responsibility for the maintenance of peace and security in the Security Council. The UK government was claiming to act on behalf of the international community "to uphold the authority of the Security Council". But it knew it did not have a majority supporting its actions
In Cabinet, there was little questioning of Lord Goldsmith about his advice and no substantive discussion of the legal issues recorded

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riverlover's picture

He committed suicide in July 2003. I met him before he died.

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Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.